Printing on/in the Body: The Revolutionary Medical Applications of 3D Printing Technology
Description
3D printing technology is versatile by nature, and will presumably alter the future of consumer goods as it gets adopted. Perhaps the most invaluable applications of 3D printing technologies will be in the biomedical sciences, where customization and precision are vital for the assurance of safety. 3D printing has the potential to drastically redefine the way medicine is practiced, creating opportunities never before possible for doctors to study, examine, and treat a host of ailments. From prosthetics to organ transplants, 3D printing will allow for more precise and highly personalized medical practices.
If a person were making a toy using 3D printing, a manufacturer loads a substance, usually plastic, into a mini-fridge-sized machine. He also loads a 3-D design of the toy he wants to make. When he tells the machine to print, it heats up and, using the design as a set of instructions, extrudes a layer of melted plastic through a nozzle onto a platform. As the plastic cools, it begins to solidify, although by itself, it's nothing more than a single slice of the desired object. The platform then moves downward so a second layer can be deposited on the first. The printer repeats this process until it forms a solid object in the shape of the toy. Right now people are experimenting using bio-materials to produce fully functioning human parts such as livers, kidneys, ears, blood vessels, skin and bones. But printing a 3-D version of a toy isn't exactly the same as printing a heart that expands and contracts like real cardiac muscle. Cut through an action figure, and you'll find plastic through and through. Cut through a human heart, and you'll find a complex matrix of cells and tissues, all of which must be arranged properly for the organ to function. For this reason, bioprinting is developing more slowly than other additive manufacturing techniques, but it is advancing. Researchers have already built modified 3-D printers and are now perfecting the processes that will allow them to print tissues and organs for pharmaceutical testing and, ultimately, for transplantation.
Applications
3D printing technology is fairy new, thus the future is bright for the amount of impact it will have on the medical community. There are many promising uses for a 3D printer in medicine. One is the ability to create enough supply organs to meet the demand currently faced and seen on organ donor lists. Another is the capability to create medically enhanced fake skin via 3D printing to provide to victims of burns or skin disease. Fake limbs and prostheses already exist today, but with the 3D printer, the fake limbs will be more able to resemble the real body parts. Furthermore, 3D printing can even predict heart attacks and treat some cardiac ailments using printed electrical components. With this new technology on the horizon, there will be many ways to cure, solve, or aid those in medical need.
3d Printing can be used on the home-scale for medical issues. In the future, at the most basic level people can print out missing teeth, or a false eye even. It important to know however, the economic feasibility of this is not reasonable in the present, or the near future, and major strides in reducing the manufacturing cost and efficiency of these machines will need to happen.
Current Issues
The FDA must approve human trials for organ transplants and it may take a decade or more to do so.
Bioengineers need to ensure that the patient's body will not reject the transplant. Immunosuppressive drugs are an option as with traditional organ transplants, but are less than ideal. Another option with bioengineered organs would be to use the patient's own cells to make them.
To make functional organs via 3D printing and other bioengineering approaches will be very labor intensive and expensive. The first true engineered organs may cost millions of dollars each. At the same time serious organ disease and organ failure cost billions if not trillions of dollars in healthcare costs and untold suffering.
Chart for Private and Commercial printers from Reddit
Topic
Printing on/in the Body: The Revolutionary Medical Applications of 3D Printing TechnologyDescription
3D printing technology is versatile by nature, and will presumably alter the future of consumer goods as it gets adopted. Perhaps the most invaluable applications of 3D printing technologies will be in the biomedical sciences, where customization and precision are vital for the assurance of safety. 3D printing has the potential to drastically redefine the way medicine is practiced, creating opportunities never before possible for doctors to study, examine, and treat a host of ailments. From prosthetics to organ transplants, 3D printing will allow for more precise and highly personalized medical practices.
If a person were making a toy using 3D printing, a manufacturer loads a substance, usually plastic, into a mini-fridge-sized machine. He also loads a 3-D design of the toy he wants to make. When he tells the machine to print, it heats up and, using the design as a set of instructions, extrudes a layer of melted plastic through a nozzle onto a platform. As the plastic cools, it begins to solidify, although by itself, it's nothing more than a single slice of the desired object. The platform then moves downward so a second layer can be deposited on the first. The printer repeats this process until it forms a solid object in the shape of the toy. Right now people are experimenting using bio-materials to produce fully functioning human parts such as livers, kidneys, ears, blood vessels, skin and bones. But printing a 3-D version of a toy isn't exactly the same as printing a heart that expands and contracts like real cardiac muscle. Cut through an action figure, and you'll find plastic through and through. Cut through a human heart, and you'll find a complex matrix of cells and tissues, all of which must be arranged properly for the organ to function. For this reason, bioprinting is developing more slowly than other additive manufacturing techniques, but it is advancing. Researchers have already built modified 3-D printers and are now perfecting the processes that will allow them to print tissues and organs for pharmaceutical testing and, ultimately, for transplantation.
Applications
3D printing technology is fairy new, thus the future is bright for the amount of impact it will have on the medical community. There are many promising uses for a 3D printer in medicine. One is the ability to create enough supply organs to meet the demand currently faced and seen on organ donor lists. Another is the capability to create medically enhanced fake skin via 3D printing to provide to victims of burns or skin disease. Fake limbs and prostheses already exist today, but with the 3D printer, the fake limbs will be more able to resemble the real body parts. Furthermore, 3D printing can even predict heart attacks and treat some cardiac ailments using printed electrical components. With this new technology on the horizon, there will be many ways to cure, solve, or aid those in medical need.
3d Printing can be used on the home-scale for medical issues. In the future, at the most basic level people can print out missing teeth, or a false eye even. It important to know however, the economic feasibility of this is not reasonable in the present, or the near future, and major strides in reducing the manufacturing cost and efficiency of these machines will need to happen.
Current Issues
Chart for Private and Commercial printers from Reddit
Source: http://www.reddit.com/r/3Dprinting/wiki/printerchartRelated Links
For general industry news and comprehensive, up-to-date articles
http://3dprintingindustry.com/medical/
Trends in 3d printing in the medical field according to EnvisionTec
http://envisiontec.com/trends-in-3d-printing-of-customized-medical-devices/
Expectations for the first 3d printed organ in 2014
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9244884/The_first_3D_printed_organ_a_liver_is_expected_in_2014
Possibilities with 3D Printing:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0EJmBoLq-g
How 3D printing body parts will revolutionize medicine:
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-07/how-3-d-printing-body-parts-will-revolutionize-medicine
3d Printing blood Vessels:
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/525161/artificial-organs-may-finally-get-a-blood-supply/
Heart Implants 3D Printed
http://www.technologyreview.com/news/525221/heart-implants-3-d-printed-to-order/